The Rosary
Chapter XXXIV
"Love Never Faileth"
Garth was standing at the open window, when Nurse Rosemary re- entered the
library; and he did not turn, immediately.
She looked anxiously for the letter, and saw it laid ready on her side of the
table. It bore signs of having been much crumpled; looking almost as a letter
might appear which had been crushed into a ball, flung into the waste-paper
basket, and afterwards retrieved. It had, however, been carefully smoothed out;
and lay ready to her hand.
When Garth turned from the window and passed to his chair, his face bore the
signs of a great struggle. He looked as one who, sightless, has yet been making
frantic efforts to see. The ivory pallor was gone. His face was flushed; and his
thick hair, which grew in beautiful curves low upon his forehead and temples,
and was usually carefully brushed back in short-cropped neatness, was now
ruffled and disordered. But his voice was completely under control, as he turned
towards his secretary.
"My dear Miss Gray," he said, "we have a difficult task before us. I have
received a letter, which it is essential I should hear. I am obliged to ask you
to read it to me, because there is absolutely no one else to whom I can prefer
such a request. I cannot but know that it will be a difficult and painful task
for you, feeling yourself an intermediary between two wounded and sundered
hearts. May I make it easier, my dear little girl, by assuring you that I know
of no one in this world from whose lips I could listen to the contents of that
letter with less pain; and, failing my own, there are no eyes beneath which I
could less grudgingly let it pass, there is no mind I could so unquestioningly
trust, to judge kindly, both of myself and of the writer; and to forget
faithfully, all which was not intended to come within the knowledge of a third
person."
"Thank you, Mr. Dalmain," said Nurse Rosemary.
Garth leaned back in his chair, shielding his face with his hand.
"Now, if you please," he said. And, very clearly and quietly, Nurse Rosemary
began to read.
"DEAR GARTH, As you will not let me come to you, so that I could say, between
you and me alone, that which must be said, I am compelled to write it. It is
your own fault, Dal; and we both pay the penalty. For how can I write to you
freely when I know, that as you listen, it will seem to you of every word I am
writing, that I am dragging a third person into that which ought to be, most
sacredly, between you and me alone. And yet, I must write freely; and I must
make you fully understand; because the whole of your future life and mine will
depend upon your reply to this letter. I must write as if you were able to hold
the letter in your own hands, and read it to yourself. Therefore, if you cannot
completely trust your secretary, with the private history of your heart and
mine, bid her give it you back without turning this first page; and let me come
myself, Garth, and tell you all the rest."
"That is the bottom of the page," said Nurse Rosemary; and waited.
Garth did not remove his hand. "I do completely trust; and she must not
come," he said.
Nurse Rosemary turned the page, and went on reading.
"I want you to remember, Garth, that every word I write, is the simple
unvarnished truth. If you look back over your remembrance of me, you will admit
that I am not naturally an untruthful person, nor did I ever take easily to
prevarication. But, Garth, I told you one lie; and that fatal exception proves
the rule of perfect truthfulness, which has always otherwise held, between you
and me; and, please God, always will hold. The confession herein contained,
concerns that one lie; and I need not ask you to realise how humbling it is to
my pride to have to force the hearing of a confession upon the man who has
already refused to admit me to a visit of friendship. You will remember that I
am not naturally humble; and have a considerable amount of proper pride; and,
perhaps, by the greatness of the effort I have had to make, you will be able to
gauge the greatness of my love. God help you to do so — my darling; my beloved;
my poor desolate boy!"
Nurse Rosemary stopped abruptly; for, at this sudden mention of love, and at
these words of unexpected tenderness from Jane, Garth had risen to his feet, and
taken two steps towards the window; as if to escape from something too immense
to be faced. But, in a moment he recovered himself, and sat down again,
completely hiding his face with his hand.
Nurse Rosemary resumed the reading of the letter.
"Ah, what a wrong I have done, both to you, and to myself! Dear, you remember
the evening on the terrace at Shenstone, when you asked me to be — when you
called me — when I WAS — YOUR WIFE? Garth, I leave this last sentence as it
stands, with its two attempts to reach the truth. I will not cross them out, but
leave them to be read to you; for, you see Garth, I finally arrived! I WAS your
wife. I did not understand it then. I was intensely surprised; unbelievably
inexperienced in matters of feeling; and bewildered by the flood of sensation
which swept me off my feet and almost engulfed me. But even then I knew that my
soul arose and proclaimed you mate and master. And when you held me, and your
dear head lay upon my heart, I knew, for the first time the meaning of the word
ecstasy; and I could have asked no kinder gift of heaven, than to prolong those
moments into hours."
Nurse Rosemary's quiet voice broke, suddenly; and the reading ceased.
Garth was leaning forward, his head buried in his hands. A dry sob rose in
his throat, just at the very moment when Nurse Rosemary's voice gave way.
Garth recovered first. Without lifting his head, with a gesture of protective
affection and sympathy, he stretched his hand across the table.
"Poor little girl," he said, "I am so sorry. It is rough on you. If only it
had come when Brand was here! I am afraid you MUST go on; but try to read
without realising. Leave the realising to me."
And Nurse Rosemary read on.
"When you lifted your head in the moonlight and gazed long and earnestly at
me — Ah, those dear eyes! — your look suddenly made me self-conscious. There
swept over me a sense of my own exceeding plainness, and of how little there was
in what those dear eyes saw, to provide reason, for that adoring look.
Overwhelmed with a shy shame I pressed your head back to the place where the
eyes would be hidden; and I realise now what a different construction you must
have put upon that action. Garth, I assure you, that when you lifted your head
the second time, and said, 'My wife,' it was the first suggestion to my mind
that this wonderful thing which was happening meant — marriage. I know it must
seem almost incredible, and more like a child of eighteen, than a woman of
thirty. But you must remember, all my dealings with men up to that hour had been
handshakes, heartiest comradeship, and an occasional clap on the shoulder given
and received. And don't forget, dear King of my heart, that, until one short
week before, you had been amongst the boys who called me 'good old Jane,' and
addressed me in intimate conversation as 'my dear fellow'! Don't forget that I
had always looked upon you as YEARS younger than myself; and though a strangely
sweet tie had grown up between us, since the evening of the concert at Overdene,
I had never realised it as love. Well — you will remember how I asked for
twelve hours to consider my answer; and you yielded, immediately; (you were so
perfect, all the time, Garth) and left me, when I asked to be alone; left me,
with a gesture I have never forgotten. It was a revelation of the way in which
the love of a man such as you exalts the woman upon whom it is outpoured. The
hem of that gown has been a sacred thing to me, ever since. It is always with
me, though I never wear it. — A detailed account of the hours which followed, I
shall hope to give you some day, my dearest. I cannot write it. Let me hurl on
to paper, in all its crude ugliness, the miserable fact which parted us; turning
our dawning joy to disillusion and sadness. Garth — it was this. I did not
believe your love would stand the test of my plainness. I knew what a worshipper
of beauty you were; how you must have it, in one form or another, always around
you. I got out my diary in which I had recorded verbatim our conversation about
the ugly preacher, whose face became illumined into beauty, by the inspired
glory within. And you added that you never thought him ugly again; but he would
always be plain. And you said it was not the sort of face one would want to have
always before one at meals; but that you were not called upon to undergo that
discipline, which would be sheer martyrdom to you."
"I was so interested, at the time; and so amused at the unconscious way in
which you stood and explained this, to quite the plainest woman of your
acquaintance, that I recorded it very fully in my journal. — Alas! On that
important night, I read the words, over and over, until they took morbid hold
upon my brain. Then — such is the self-consciousness awakened in a woman by the
fact that she is loved and sought — I turned on all the lights around my
mirror, and critically and carefully examined the face you would have to see
every day behind your coffee-pot at breakfast, for years and years, if I said
'Yes,' on the morrow. Darling, I did not see myself through your eyes, as, thank
God, I have done since. And I DID NOT TRUST YOUR LOVE TO STAND THE TEST. It
seemed to me, I was saving both of us from future disappointment and misery, by
bravely putting away present joy, in order to avoid certain disenchantment. My
beloved, it will seem to you so coolly calculating, and so mean; so unworthy of
the great love you were even then lavishing upon me. But remember, for years,
your remarkable personal grace and beauty had been a source of pleasure to me;
and I had pictured you wedded to Pauline Lister, for instance, in her dazzling
whiteness, and soft radiant youth. So my morbid self-consciousness said: 'What!
This young Apollo, tied to my ponderous plainness; growing handsomer every year,
while I grow older and plainer?' Ah, darling! It sounds so unworthy, now we know
what our love is. But it sounded sensible and right that night; and at last,
with a bosom that ached, and arms that hung heavy at the thought of being
emptied of all that joy, I made up my mind to say 'no.' Ah, believe me, I had no
idea what it already meant to you. I thought you would pass on at once to
another fancy; and transfer your love to one more able to meet your needs, at
every point. Honestly, Garth, I thought I should be the only one left desolate.
— Then came the question: how to refuse you. I knew if I gave the true reason,
you would argue it away, and prove me wrong, with glowing words, before which I
should perforce yield. So — as I really meant not to let you run the risk, and
not to run it myself — I lied to you, my beloved. To you, whom my whole being
acclaimed King of my heart, Master of my will; supreme to me, in love and life,
— to YOU I said: 'I cannot marry a mere boy.' Ah, darling! I do not excuse it.
I do not defend it. I merely confess it; trusting to your generosity to admit,
that no other answer would have sent you away. Ah, your poor Jane, left
desolate! If you could have seen her in the little church, calling you back;
retracting and promising; listening for your returning footsteps, in an agony of
longing. But my Garth is not made of the stuff which stands waiting on the door-
mat of a woman's indecision."
"The lonely year which followed so broke my nerve, that Deryck Brand told me
I was going all to pieces, and ordered me abroad. I went, as you know; and in
other, and more vigorous, surroundings, there came to me a saner view of life.
In Egypt last March, on the summit of the Great Pyramid, I made up my mind that
I could live without you no longer. I did not see myself wrong; but I yearned so
for your love, and to pour mine upon you, my beloved, that I concluded it was
worth the risk. I made up my mind to take the next boat home, and send for you.
Then — oh, my own boy — I heard. I wrote to you; and you would not let me
come."
"Now I know perfectly well, that you might say: 'She did not trust me when I
had my sight. Now that I cannot see, she is no longer afraid.' Garth, you might,
say that; but it would not be true. I have had ample proof lately that I was
wrong, and ought to have trusted you all through. What it is, I will tell you
later. All I can say now is: that, if your dear shining eyes could see, they
would see, NOW, a woman who is, trustfully and unquestioningly, all your own. If
she is doubtful of her face and figure, she says quite simply: 'They pleased
HIM; and they are just HIS. I have no further right to criticise them. If he
wants them, they are not mine, but his.' Darling, I cannot tell you now, how I
have arrived at this assurance. But I have had proofs beyond words of your
faithfulness and love."
"The question, therefore, simply resolves itself into this: Can you forgive
me? If you can forgive me, I can come to you at once. If this thing is past
forgiveness, I must make up my mind to stay away. But, oh, my own Dear, — the
bosom on which once you laid your head waits for you with the longing ache of
lonely years. If you need it, do not thrust it from you."
"Write me one word by your own hand: 'Forgiven.' It is all I ask. When it
reaches me, I will come to you at once. Do not dictate a letter to your
secretary. I could not bear it. Just write — if you can truly write it —
'FORGIVEN'; and send it to 'Your Wife.'"
The room was very still, as Nurse Rosemary finished reading; and, laying down
the letter, silently waited. She wondered for a moment whether she could get
herself a glass of water, without disturbing him; but decided to do without it.
At last Garth lifted his head.
"She has asked me to do a thing impossible," he said; and a slow smile
illumined his drawn face.
Jane clasped her hands upon her breast.
"CAN you not write 'forgiven'?" asked Nurse Rosemary, brokenly.
"No," said Garth. "I cannot. Little girl, give me a sheet of paper, and a
pencil."
Nurse Rosemary placed them close to his hand.
Garth took up the pencil. He groped for the paper; felt the edges with his
left hand; found the centre with his fingers; and, in large firm letters, wrote
one word.
"Is that legible?" he asked, passing it across to Nurse Rosemary.
"Quite legible," she said; for she answered before it was blotted by her
tears.
Instead of "forgiven," Garth had written: "LOVED."
"Can you post it at once?" Garth asked, in a low, eager voice. "And she will
come — oh, my God, she will come! If we catch to-night's mail, she may be here
the day after to-morrow!"
Nurse Rosemary took up the letter; and, by an almost superhuman effort, spoke
steadily.
"Mr. Dalmain," she said; "there is a postscript to this letter. It says:
'Write to The Palace Hotel, Aberdeen.'"
Garth sprang up, his whole face and figure alive with excitement.
"In Aberdeen?" he cried. "Jane, in Aberdeen! Oh, my God! If she gets this
paper to-morrow morning, she may be here any time in the day. Jane! Jane! Dear
little Rosemary, do you hear? Jane will come to- morrow! Didn't I tell you
something was going to happen? You and Simpson were too British to understand;
but Margery knew; and the woods told us it was Joy coming through Pain. Could
that be posted at once, Miss Gray?"
The May-Day mood was upon him again. His face shone. His figure was electric
with expectation. Nurse Rosemary sat at the table watching him; her chin in her
hands. A tender smile dawned on her lips, out of keeping with her supposed face
and figure; so full was it of the glorious expectation of a mature and perfect
love.
"I will go to the post-office myself, Mr. Dalmain," she said. "I shall be
glad of the walk; and I can be back by tea-time."
At the post-office she did not post the word in Garth's handwriting. That lay
hidden in her bosom. But she sent off two telegrams. The first to
The Duchess of Meldyum,
Palace Hotel, Aberdeen.
"Come here by 5.50 train without fail this evening."
The second to
Sir Deryck Brand,
Wimpole Sheet, London.
"All is right."